Doe v. Roe

677 P.2d 468, 67 Haw. 63
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1984
DocketNO. 9150
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 677 P.2d 468 (Doe v. Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Roe, 677 P.2d 468, 67 Haw. 63 (haw 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

WAKATSUKI, J.

Petitioner-Mother filed this paternity action in the Family Court of the First Circuit to establish Defendant as the natural father of her child.

The lower court permitted the child to be substituted for the *64 mother as petitioner and ruled that Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 584-7 (1975) 1 is unconstitutional as applied to the child.

This appeal is on the lower court’s ruling.

I.

Petitioner-Mother first filed her paternity action on December 1, 1980. On June 19, 1982, when the lower court granted leave to substitute the child as petitioner, HRS § 584-7 provided for a three-year statute of limitations as to all petitioners. 2 The child in question was born on August 30,1971. Under said HRS § 584-7, the time for bringing a paternity action had long passed when this matter was first brought for adjudication. 3

In 1983, while this appeal was pending, the legislature amended § 584-7 by Act 288, § 2,1983 Haw. Sess. Laws (hereafter Act 288). As amended, the law gives the child or the child’s personal representative up to three years after the child reaches the age of majority in which to file a paternity action. 4 This amendment became effec *65 tive on June 14, 1983. Thus, the question before this court is whether HRS § 584-7 as amended is applicable to this case. We conclude in the affirmative. We further hold that the child in this case is not precluded from bringing a paternity action against the Defendant; thereby rendering the issue raised by the Defendant moot.

Defendant argues that HRS § 584-7, as amended, should apply only to a child who had not attained the age of three at the time when Act 288 became effective and not to the child in question here, who was already twelve years of age. We disagree. Defendant’s argument overlooks the obvious intent of the legislature to extend the limitation period to all children who had not attained 21 years of age at the time of the enactment of Act 288.

Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 584 is remedial in nature and must be construed liberally in order to accomplish the purpose for which it was enacted. Roe v. Doe, 59 Haw. 259, 581 P.2d 310 (1978). That purpose is to provide substantive legal equality for all children regardless of the marital status of their parents. Hse. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 190, in 1975 House Journal, at 1019. Obviously, permitting an illegitimate child the opportunity to establish the support obligation of his or her natural father throughout the child’s minority satisfies the purpose of the statute.

In Roe v. Doe, supra, this court held that statutory causes of action which become barred through the expiration of a statute of limitations can be revived by a subsequent legislative extension of that period of limitations. Whether the extended limitation period revives a previously barred claim depends on the intent of the legislature. Id.

The legislature, in the committee reports attached to Act 288, cited the problems of proof surrounding paternity actions as justification for a short limitations period to protect alleged fathers from stale and fraudulent claims. The legislature went on to recognize, however, that scientific advances in blood testing reduced the evidentiary problems of older claims. Hse. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 429, Regular Session of 1983; Sen. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 790, Regular Session of 1983. These scientifically conducted blood tests were deemed highly probative in proving paternity. Their effectiveness has already been recognized by the United States Supreme Court. Little v. Streater, 452 U.S. 1 (1981). It is apparent that the *66 legislature determined that the problems of proof which justify a short limitations period no longer existed. Further, the legislature recognized two purposes in extending the limitations period. One is the public’s interest in relieving the welfare burden when the nátural parent can and should be responsible for the child’s support. Hse. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 429, supra. Second, it would relieve the child of being wholly dependent upon its mother for establishing paternity. Sen. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 790, supra.

Based on the legislative history of HRS § 584-7 and its subsequent amendment, and the reasoning of the legislature as evidenced through its standing committee reports, we conclude that the legislature intended that Act 288 provide for revival of previously barred paternity actions, even though such actions could not have been brought prior to the enactment of Act 288.

II.

Roe v. Doe, supra, instructs us that a change in legislative policy extending the limitations period “can be sustained only so long as the putative father’s right to due process is not [thereby] violated.” Roe v. Doe, 59 Haw. at 271, 581 P.2d. at 318. Although we conclude that the legislature intended that previously barred claims under HRS § 584-7 (1975) can be revived by Act 288, its application in this particular case is permissible only if it does not offend the state or federal constitutional guarantees of due process.

In Roe v. Doe, supra, we adopted

a case-by-case approach to the question of the constitutional permissibility of the revival of paternity claims barred by the former statute of limitations. If a putative father, named in a paternity proceeding, were able to demonstrate that he had acted in specific reliance on the bar of the statute of limitations and that special hardships or oppressive results would follow from the lifting of the bar, retrospective application of HRS § 584-7 might not be constitutionally permissible. Absent such a demonstration of direct reliance and resultant hardship, it would not be possible to say that the defendant was deprived of any constitutional right.

Id. at 271, 581 P.2d at 318.

There is nothing in the record to indicate that Defendant was in *67

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Related

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53 P.3d 277 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2002)
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838 P.2d 223 (California Supreme Court, 1992)
Bulgo v. Munoz
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705 P.2d 535 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
677 P.2d 468, 67 Haw. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-roe-haw-1984.